Yoani Sanchez on Castro and Obama's Key Moment
April 1, 2016
By Carlos F. Chamorro
HAVANA TIMES – In defining the key moment of President Barack Obama's 
visit to Cuba, journalist and blogger Yoani Sanchez, who directs the 
site known as 14yMedio, doesn't hesitate in naming the live press 
conference when – to the general astonishment of Cubans – President Raul 
Castro found himself obliged to respond to the question of a CNN 
reporter regarding the Cuban political prisoners.
That instant, charged with a historic symbolism, brought to mind a scene 
from writer Javier Cuevas' masterpiece Anatomy of an instant, set during 
Spain's February 23, 1981, coup d'etat.  In the scene, ex-President 
Adolfo Suarez remains in his assigned Congressional seat in the 
semicircle while all of the other legislators, except for Santiago 
Carrillo and General Gutierrez Mellado, have hit the floor to protect 
themselves from the bullets of those perpetrating the coup.  In Havana, 
on the other hand, Castro appeared irascible and off guard, showcasing 
his worst authoritarian disposition to his people, while he navigated 
the questions of the international press. This paradoxical moment has 
been engraved in the minds of Cubans, and may in the future represent 
the beginning of a change of era.
Through a Skype connection that came and went, we spoke with Yoani about 
how Cubans live – those in the party, those in the streets, and those 
who are dissidents; the thawing of diplomatic relations between 
Washington and Havana, amid hope and outsized expectations; and the 
uncertainty of a country "that can go two steps forward and three steps 
backwards.  We also talked about the celebration with the irreverent 
music of the Rolling Stones, and how Cuba has felt these days less of an 
island and more "part of the world."
Yoani, what's the final assessment of Cubans regarding Obama's visit to 
Cuba?  I imagine there are several different visions.
YS: Yes, the government has one account, which seems to be fairly 
critical and negative judging by the reflection and the comments made by 
Fidel Castro; these were pretty aggressive against Obama.  Another final 
balance is that of everyday Cubans who have invested a lot of hope and 
illusions in the outcome of this visit.  People think that "Saint Obama" 
will solve all our problems.  And there's yet another set of conclusions 
on the part of the opposition, the critical sector: this group received 
a huge boost from Obama's meeting with them, but they want a little more 
– stronger pronouncements regarding human rights, freedom for the 
political prisoners, and other changes.
How much play did Obama's speech get? It was transmitted live on Cuban 
television, but after that did the press and the official radio stations 
continue to circulate it, or cover it up?
YS: That's a good question, because whoever didn't see it live, didn't 
get to see it.  After the transmission of Obama speaking in the Havana 
Grand Theater, the complete speech was neither transcribed nor 
published, to the surprise of many. They tried to offer little clips or 
fragments of the speech that supported the official version.  At any 
rate, there's a deeply submerged and illegal Cuba with alternative 
networks for the distribution of information.  Right at this moment, a 
pirated copy of the video is circulating from hand to hand and I can 
assure you that it's very popular.  Nothing is more popular than the 
forbidden and Obama's speech is right now in the zone of the illicit.
Obama placed a lot of emphasis on the potential for social and economic 
change that lies in the self-employed workers' sector.  What real weight 
does this group have?
YS: We're talking about a group of Cubans numbering less than half a 
million who can make their way in a sector that the government calls 
cuentapropistas, a euphemism for privately employed in occupations that 
generally involve services, food vending, etc., but which are almost 
never true professions.  You can't be a self-employed lawyer, architect 
or construction crew.  The fact that Obama aimed his speech at them 
seems to me very intelligent, because it's a sector that could change 
Cuba, but right now it's very limited by the high taxes, the absence of 
a wholesale market, the government oversight itself, and above all by 
the suspicion that a system that has declared itself Marxist-Leninist 
harbors towards private business people and workers.
Unlike the aforementioned gathering, the one that Obama sustained with 
the leaders of civic organizations that promote political rights and 
freedom of the press was private.  What degree of significance did this 
meeting have?
YS: It was a big boost to the critical and dissident sector.  On the one 
hand, it was the first time that a foreign president who visited the 
island met with such a varied group of activists. Listening for over an 
hour and forty minutes is a sign of respect. From now on, the next 
functionaries and diplomats to visit Cuba may follow his example.  On 
the other hand, it was also a huge boost for the independent press.  The 
fact that at least four reporters who are not recognized by the 
government could enter there, myself among them, take pictures and 
interview functionaries at the highest level that accompanied Obama was 
a way of saying: there exists a press beyond Granma.
There is a sector of civil society that makes demands and exercises 
certain autonomy:  is that an irreversible opening, or could it be 
squashed again by the forces of repression?
YS: In Cuba you never know.  It's like a sinister dance that can go two 
steps forward and three steps back.  But I have the impression that 
Castroism has lost a lot of strength.  In the first place, because the 
historic generation are approaching their nineties.  On the other hand, 
the "Obama coup", although merely symbolic because there's been no great 
change since he left, has touched certain chords in Cubans about their 
national identity and it's going to be hard for the Castro forces to 
recuperate.  Castroism can't win love or hypnotize people.  Obama has 
managed things that the Castro followers can't compete with, such as 
talking with the best-known Cuban humorist, playing dominoes, eating in 
a private restaurant.  He has moved along some paths that leave Raul and 
Fidel Castro far behind.
In the press conference with Obama and Raul Castro, Castro was asked 
about the political prisoners and he promised to free them if he 
received a list.  What happened afterwards?
YS: Cubans of my generation watched the President give a press 
conference for the first time – it was unprecedented.  That was one of 
the most important parts of Obama's visit, shining a spotlight on Raul 
Castro's discomfort, because he looked angry, out of place, surprised, 
and then said something that in my opinion is important: he stated that 
if he received the list he would free the political prisoners.  If it's 
not a dictatorship and if we have a Rule of Law with a judicial system, 
how is it possible for a president to say – "I'll free them tonight"? 
  If Obama's visit served to make clear that Raul Castro can't face a 
free press, then it has been very useful.  It laid bare the 
authoritarianism and the dictatorship that we experience on the island.  
After that press conference I understand that several independent 
organizations turned in the list of people in prison, but there was no 
liberation.
What can be expected from the upcoming Cuban Communist Party congress 
that will be held next April 16?
YS: A lot and very little is expected.  Why the contradiction?  "A lot" 
because the party membership itself has been giving signs that they're 
unhappy that there hasn't been a public discussion during the last 
months of the topics to be covered.  There's a part of the membership 
that believes in the party and believes that this seventh congress could 
resolve some vital questions for the organization.  But on the part of 
the citizens, very little is expected, because a lot of people no longer 
believe that the changes can come from within the Party.  The problem 
that the Congress faces is that whatever happens – whatever it does or 
doesn't do – everything will be seen as a reaction to Obama's visit.  If 
they make a change, it will be because Obama pressured; if they make no 
change, it will be seen as their reply to Obama.  They're pretty well 
trapped in this dynamic.
You direct a digital site, 14yMedio, whose stories we've reproduced in 
Confidential. Can it be read in Cuba without interruption or censorship?
YS: Unfortunately, since the day we were born on May 21, 2014 – and 
we'll soon be two years old –  we've been technologically blockaded.  
The Government has implemented a "filter" that keeps Cubans from 
directly accessing 14yMedio.  Nonetheless, I should clarify that I live 
in a country where there are 1001 ways to leap over the censorship.  
That is, everyone knows the way to enter into a censored site, a 
forbidden page, an inaccessible content.  That cheers me, because I 
believe that we're an island that specializes in opening windows when 
the doors are closed.
Obama left and Mick Jagger with the Rolling Stones arrived.  What did 
the concert leave behind for Cubans?
YS: In the first instance, a sensation of universality.  Remember, we 
live on an island and as a Cuban poet says, it's the damn circumstance 
of water everywhere. So the fact that a nation that has missed out for 
decades on hearing voices like The Beatles, Whitney Houston, Freddie 
Mercury, musical personalities that left this world without ever even 
setting foot on our island, could at least receive the Rolling Stones 
was a very positive sign for Cubans.   We feel like: "Wow! We're part of 
the world!"  It also felt like a victory for many people who suffered 
the censorship of a certain type of music, especially rock. Now they 
suddenly saw the officials receive with fifes and drums those same 
musicians that decades before had been stigmatized, that were the 
anti-new man, the enemy of that socialist man that the Castroists wanted 
to form who thought only about work and never about entertainment, the 
total opposite of what Mick Jagger is.  The Rolling Stones concert also 
touched many symbolic chords.
Source: Yoani Sanchez on Castro and Obama's Key Moment - Havana 
Times.org - http://www.havanatimes.org/?p=117863
 
 
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